23.02.2011 [University of Texas at Austin News] - His most recent book is a co-edited volume of WalterBenjamin's media-theoretical writings published in 2008 by Harvard University Press as "The Work of Art in the Age of its Technological Reproducibility, and Other Essays on Media.

21.03.2011 [The Bookseller] - "WalterBenjamin's The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction has never been published before in Penguin Classics, it's a new translation, and it's one of the best essays of the 20th century," he said. Freudenheim also highlighted Robert

16.03.2011 [The Millions] - Kraus compares this to how WalterBenjamin writes grief: “ Davey's writing is informed by illness, but it isn't about illness. Life, as Deleuze once observed, isn't personal. Davey offers herself as a protagonist to lead us towards recognitions that

07.03.2011 [Indie Wire (blog)] - The set-up channels WalterBenjamin's seminal 1935 essay, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” which scholars obsess over to this day. Benjamin believed that reproductions destroyed an art work's original “aura,” the intrinsic

03.03.2011 [Wisconsin State Journal] - On Monday, March 28, author Carl Djerassi, an award-winning chemist, novelist and playwright, will read from his book “Four Jews on Parnassus,” which is described as a “dramatized conversation” between four intellectuals: WalterBenjamin

04.03.2011 [People's Daily Online] - Many works of German philosophers Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, Heidegger, and WalterBenjamin started appearing on the bookshelves along with classical works of Chinese philosophy. There were people lining up through the night at the gates of bookstores to

27.02.2011 [First Things (blog)] - Yes, I too have read WalterBenjamin, and I too appreciate his attempts to make the idiosyncrasy and contingency of Baudelaire's flaneur in the modern world of mechanical production the basis of something significant beyond itself.

28.02.2011 [Art Threat] - Art that is often so meaningless, that is so much sign and so little signifier that poor old WalterBenjamin himself would likely quite happily bleed from the ears rather than even have to consider such a sad state of replicated affairs.

24.02.2011 [Pitch Weekly (blog)] - One side-effect: Readers flooded The New England Home Magazine and likeminded publications with photos of kids and pets, exemplifying what WalterBenjamin labeled the age of adorable reproduction.